The center of our home is anchored by a single photograph hanging directly above the living room couch. The glass is marred by a thin, spiderweb crack in the corner—the result of a stray foam soccer ball and an eight-year-old’s overenthusiastic kick. When it happened, my dad didn’t get angry. He simply stared at the frame for a long moment and whispered, “Well, I survived that day. I can survive this.” In the image, a lanky teenage boy stands on a high school football field, his graduation cap sitting crookedly atop his head. He looks utterly terrified, his eyes wide with a mixture of shock and fierce determination. Clutched in his arms is a tiny bundle wrapped in a fleece blanket. That bundle was me.
For years, I teased him about his expression in that photo. I told him he looked like he was holding a live explosive, afraid that a single wrong breath might cause me to shatter. He would always give a characteristic shrug to dodge the emotional weight of the memory and reply, “I wasn’t going to drop you. I was just convinced I was going to break you. But apparently, I did okay.”
“Okay” was an understatement. He did everything. My dad was only seventeen the night I entered his life. He had returned home from an exhausting shift delivering pizzas to find his old bicycle leaning against the fence. In the front basket, tucked inside a series of blankets, was a three-month-old baby girl. He initially thought someone had left a bag of laundry or trash, but then the bundle moved. Under the folds was a note that would reorder his entire universe: She’s yours. I can’t do this. His mother had passed away, his father was long gone, and his uncle was a man of few words and less affection. He was just a kid with a rusty bike and a part-time job. Most teenagers in that position would have called the police or social services, surrendering the burden to the state. Instead, he wrapped me tighter, adjusted his graduation gown, and walked onto that football field the next morning to receive his diploma with his daughter in his arms. That was the day the picture was taken, and that was the day he chose to never put me down.